Kuwait Times

Powerful storm hits Philippine­s

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MANILA: Tens of thousands of people were forced into cramped shelters by the powerful storm pounding the Philippine­s on Friday, making social distancing nearly impossible as the nation battles the coronaviru­s pandemic. Typhoon Vongfong smashed homes, schools and virus quarantine sites when it hit central Samar island on Thursday, but then weakened into a severe tropical storm on its path north to the capital Manila.

The storm struck as tens of millions of Filipinos are hunkered down at home to protect themselves against COVID-19, but more than 140,000 had to flee in central Bicol region because of the powerful storm, disaster officials said. Vongfong packed gusts up to 190 kilometres (120 miles) an hour and drenching rains when it roared into the Philippine­s.

“We have to wear masks and apply distancing at all times,” local police official Carlito Abriz told AFP. “It’s difficult to enforce because they (the evacuees) are stressed. But we are doing our best.”

Bicol saw less damage than hard-hit Samar, so some of those in shelters had begun to return home after the storm passed on Friday, disaster officials reported. Authoritie­s have said they will run shelters at half of capacity, provide masks to people who don’t have them and try to keep families grouped together.

However, many spaces normally used as storm shelters have been converted into quarantine sites for people suspected of being infected with coronaviru­s. Ben Evardone, governor of the central province Eastern Samar, said local quarantine sites, schools and at least one church were levelled by the fierce wind.

“So what will happen to us now, what will we use as COVID facilities here?,” he asked. “This is a big challenge for us.” Fortunatel­y the central region where the storm struck first is not one of the hotspots of the Philippine­s’ outbreak, which has seen 12,091 reported infections and 806 dead.

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